European Central Bank selects 36 payment service providers for digital euro pilot

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Europe’s central bank is getting serious about its digital currency ambitions. The European Central Bank has selected 36 licensed payment service providers to participate in a pilot program for the digital euro, moving the project from concept into something that looks a lot more like a real product.

The selection, completed in July 2026, came after a competitive application process that drew more than 50 submissions from banks and payment firms across the euro area. The ECB picked its 36 with an eye toward diversity, prioritizing a mix of business models and geographic spread to stress-test the digital euro across different markets and use cases.

What the pilot actually looks like

The 12-month pilot is scheduled to begin in the second half of 2027. Participating PSPs, merchants, and Eurosystem staff will run the digital euro through person-to-person transfers, person-to-business payments at physical points of sale, and e-commerce transactions.

Participation is voluntary and unremunerated. The PSPs are expected to sign agreements with their respective national central banks and provide structured feedback to help the ECB refine both the technology and the operational processes underpinning the digital euro.

The ECB has not released the names of the 36 selected providers. Applications closed on May 14, 2026, following a series of focus sessions held in January, March, and April of that year.

The legislative engine running in the background

On June 23, 2026, the European Parliament’s Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee, known as ECON, voted 43-14 to advance negotiations on the legal framework governing the digital euro.

The ECB’s own preparation phase for the project formally concluded in October 2025. The current working timeline puts regulatory approval and potential issuance readiness somewhere around 2029, meaning the pilot program is one of the last major technical checkboxes before a decision on full deployment.

What this means for markets and the crypto industry

The digital euro is explicitly a central bank-issued currency. The ECB has been careful to distance the project from decentralized crypto, and that framing is deliberate.

The broader macro angle is about European monetary sovereignty. The EU has long been uncomfortable with its dependence on American payment networks, specifically Visa, Mastercard, and the dollar-dominated SWIFT system. The digital euro is, in part, a geopolitical project designed to give Europe more control over its own financial plumbing.

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